None.
A yard is a measure of distance while a 5x5 is a measure of area. The two measure different things and, according to basic principles of dimensional analysis, conversion from one to the other comparing one to the other is not valid.
In any case, since the units are not specified there is no way of knowing whether the question refers to squares of 5 inch x 5 inch or 5 miles x 5 miles.
Oh, dude, you're really asking me to count squares now? Okay, so in a 5x5 grid, there are 25 individual squares of various sizes. You've got your big squares, your medium squares, your tiny squares... it's a whole square party in there. So, like, 25 squares, man.
18
6
30 squares within a 1 unit grid. 30 squares in all: 4*4 square: 1 3*3 squares: 4 2*2 squares: 9 1*1 squares: 16
1200 yards * 3 feet/yard = 3600 feet
Oh, dude, you're really asking me to count squares now? Okay, so in a 5x5 grid, there are 25 individual squares of various sizes. You've got your big squares, your medium squares, your tiny squares... it's a whole square party in there. So, like, 25 squares, man.
3-4
There are 49 of the smallest squares. However, any grid forms "squares" that consist of more than one of the smallest squares. For example, there are four different 6x6 squares that each include 36 of the small squares, nine different 5x5 squares, sixteen 4x4 squares, twenty-five 3 x 3 squares, and thirty-six different squares that contain 4 of the small squares. One could therefore discern 140 distinct "squares." The number can be calculated from the formula [(n)(n+1)(2n+1)] / 6 where n is the grid size.
18
You can make three squares
8 squares x 2/3 = 16/3 squares = 5 1/3 squares
it is 78 because 5x5=25+50=75+3
Yards and yards are the same length, so there are three (3) yards in three (3) yards
(1+3)/(5x5) = 4/25Simplify 1+3 to 4.4/(5x5)Simplify 5x5 to 25.4/25
There are 48 such squares.
12 squares.
3 yards 3 yards